'The Art of Listening: Under Water' installation


Opening of the exhibition: The Art of Listening: Under Water, a 28 channel installation made in collaboration with Tony Myatt at Lenfest Center for the Arts, Colombia University. The Art of Listening: Under Water was initially commissioned by Audemars Piguet Contemporary in 2019, and has been reimagined for Columbia University School of the Arts with their support.

From the University website:

Columbia University School of the Arts is proud to present Norwegian artist Jana Winderen’s immersive, site-specific installation, The Art of Listening: Under Water. Visitors will experience a composition of underwater recordings made by the artist over many years in various locations — the Barents Sea around the North Pole, Iceland, Greenland, Thailand, the Caribbean, and off the coast of Miami — alongside new recordings made in and around New York City bodies of water, just days before the opening of this installation.

Winderen has been using hydrophones to make underwater recordings since 2005. “When I make recordings in the environment, I record the whole ecosystem with the animals in it.” she explains. “You will hear crustaceans, schools of fish, and mammals like dolphins, whales, seals, and humans.”

The composition highlights the fragility of our ecosystems, made more so by the constant intrusions of human sounds underwater today. Human activities in the world’s waters are ubiquitous and disruptive. Cargo and cruise ships, seismic airguns used to test for oil, pile drivings, industrial activities, military sonars, jet skis, tankers, and fishing vessels generate underwater noise pollution that puts stress on aquatic life — impeding animals’ ability to hear each other, communicate, feed, mate, and navigate. Winderen notes that “a movement that we make in one place can have an impact more broadly across the world.”

Working with longtime collaborator Tony Myatt, The Art of Listening: Under Water will be presented as a site-specific 360° spatial audio installation, just blocks from the Hudson River, in the Lantern — the flexible top-floor space of the Lenfest Center for the Arts on Columbia University’s Manhattanville campus.